Public Works and Natural Resources Committee
The Public Works and Natural Resources Committee received comprehensive updates on two key environmental initiatives advancing the city's sustainability goals. Staff reported significant progress on single-stream recycling adoption, with 70% of residential customers transitioned and nearly 100% of Monday route customers fully implemented. The mandatory organics management program is set to launch in January 2025, expanding Food Plus composting services from the current 8,000 customers to all 20,000 residential customers by May 2025. On single-use plastics, the city has achieved approximately 40% compliance among 524 affected businesses after two years of education-first outreach. While full-service restaurants show 72% partial compliance, hotels and motels lag at 36%. Council members expressed differing views on when to shift from education to enforcement, with Councilmember Hammill pushing for stronger enforcement measures while Chair Stone emphasized concerns about greenwashing and supply chain barriers affecting small businesses. The Eldridge Avenue bike lane pilot project showed encouraging results, with 30% increased non-motorized usage but no significant change in vehicle speeds. The project successfully met its primary goal of enhancing bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure while maintaining traffic flow, though it did not achieve the hoped-for traffic calming effects.
This was an informational meeting with no formal votes taken. Both agenda items were updates on ongoing programs: **AB 24295 - Recycling and Single-Use Plastics Update:** Information/discussion only. Staff will continue monitoring a…
**January 2025:** Mandatory organics management (Food Plus) begins for all residential customers, transitioning from current 8,000 voluntary participants to all 20,000 households. **May 2025:** Target date for full adoption of mandatory organics management across all residential customers. **December 1, 2024:** Washington State Commerce Department study on plastic…


